Videos by ComicBook.com
Storm has always been one of the most important and powerful mutants on the planet. Still, her influence and abilities have only grown over the years, as when she became the regent of Mars during the Krakoa era and when she officially became a goddess and Avatar of Life. Yet despite all these larger-than-life positions and power-ups, one of the character’s best moments in recent memory is also one of her most grounded. In a world where humans and mutants are constantly at odds, Storm reminds readers of what the X-Men used to stand for.
Storm Opens Her Doors to Everyone in Need, Not Just Mutants

Recently, Storm has used her weather-manipulating abilities to create an environmental Eden called the Storm Sanctuary. This massive, floating building acts as a place for refugees and discriminated mutants to find a place of security. After the destruction of the mutant nation of Krakoa, the Storm Sanctuary seemed like a chance for many mutants to have a fresh start. However, tensions immediately begin to arise again after an army of Japanese demons lays waste to France, and the Storm Sanctuary arrives to offer aid. While inside the Sanctuary, everyone is happy and well-fed, outside, there is a full-on riot.
In a scene disturbingly similar to the isolationist ideology of the Krakoa era, many mutants refuse to allow human refugees into the Storm Sanctuary. A metallic mutant screams that the Storm Sanctuary is for mutants only and punches a human for trying to get in. The mutant also says that it was unfair for French emergency response groups to prioritize saving humans. However, the refugee rightfully points out that humans were just as affected by the demon attack, if not more so. They didn’t have any powers to defend themselves, and many humans lost their lives in the devastation. And while mutants inside the Sanctuary were filling their bellies, the destitute humans were starving. Things nearly get worse when the human tries to hit the mutant with a sledgehammer.
Storm arrives and quickly puts a stop to the hostility. However, instead of kicking out the human refugees, she welcomes them into the Sanctuary and offers them food and safety. Storm has always been one of the X-Men’s most charitable members as she frequently uses her powers to bring fertile lands to areas suffering from famine, so this action isn’t surprising. Later, the mutant who attacked the humans asked Storm why she wouldn’t maintain Krakoa’s mutant-only policy. Storm replies that while Krakoa was beautiful and gave mutants a chance to prosper, it didn’t help diminish the fear and hatred humans had for mutants. More importantly, she says they must be willing to help anyone, regardless of race or creed.
If this were during the Krakoa era, the X-Men would have kicked the refugees out for even daring to set foot on Krakoa without a mutant ambassador to vouch for them. After nearly a decade of the X-Men acting superior to humanity, Storm finally shows what it means to respect all sapiens and thereby to be a hero and an X-Man. The Krakoa era may have been a time of prosperity for mutants, but it was also a time when they isolated themselves from the rest of the world and allowed bigoted views towards humans fester. What Storm has done by opening her doors to human civilians in need of aid is to rekindle the dream that Professor X created when he first created the X-Men.









